Russian nuclear-capable bombers intercepted off California coast

A spokesperson for the North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) confirmed this week that a fleet of Russian bombers set off alarms in the United States after coming within 50 miles of California’s Pacific coast.

Navy Capt. Jeff Davis, a spokesman for NORAD, told Washington Free Beacon reporter Bill Gertz
that a pair of Tu-95 Bear H aircraft maintained by Russia came
close to US airspace during practice bombing while four of the
planes were conducting bombing runs near Alaska. According to
Nuclear Threat Initiative nonprofit
organization, Russia has 29 Tu-95 MS6 Bear H6s and 30 Tu-95 MS16
Bear H16s, which are equipped to fire both traditional and
nuclear payloads at targets from the air.

David told the Beacon that this week’s incident occurred on
Monday afternoon and was caught quickly by radar systems that
monitored American air defense zones. The radar spotted all four
Russian aircraft, he said, and two F-22 fighter jets used by the
US Air Force were then mobilized to intercept the bombers.

“After tracking the bombers as they flew eastward, two of the
four Bears turned around and headed west toward the Russian Far
East,” Gertz wrote. “The remaining two nuclear-capable
bombers then flew southeast and around 9:30 P.M. entered the US
northern air defense zone off the coast of Northern
California.

Those two aircraft, he added, made it within 50 miles of the
coast before turning around. The pilots, Davis told the Beacon,
appeared to have “acted professionally” and that their
behavior was on par with activity that’s “not unusual”
for long-range aviation training missions typically conducted by
Russia during the summer months. Indeed, in recent weeks other
Russian-owned Tu-95 bombers skirted UK airspace and have come
close to US property in both Guam and California, The Aviationist reported last month. In
March, Russia’s daily Nezavisimaya Gazeta, said the nation’s
Strategic Missile Forces began a three-day drill to make sure
there was sufficient readiness to conduct a nuclear offensive.

“We assess this was part of training,” David added of
this week’s incident, “And they did not enter territorial
airspace.”

In spite of its age, David Cenciotti wrote for The Aviationist,
the Tu-94 “still represents a significant strategic weapon in
Putin’s arsenal.”

Earlier this week, Russian drills intensified when the nation’s
military began exercises in the Baltic that the Defense Ministry
said was a response to recent exercises in eastern Europe
conducted by NATO forces. Allied nations currently maintain a
presence there, much to the chagrin of Moscow, as tensions along
Ukraine’s border with Russia remain high.

The US State Dept. reported last year that Russia may have an
arsenal that contains as many as 1,400 operationally deployed
strategic nuclear warheads and 894 deployed and non-deployed
launchers